Monday, 29 August 2016

Hello all! I'm on another continent, but travelling with supplies this time, and even though I've had all sorts of settling in to do (including horrid form-filling and financial shenanigans - I hadn't reckoned on having to open a US bank account!) as well as starting on my next round of creative adventures in my "other life", I've still found time for a bit of crafting.I have to confess that on my first free afternoon I made my way to Michaels to augment my little stash, and I started on a few tags and panels as well as a journal page spread just to kick things off.This is one of the panels, made out of a third of a sheet of 9x12 watercolour card (there are two more to come at some point therefore), and I seem still to be on the blue/brown streak.

The delicate pale hues of my Vintage Journey bird tag have become slightly grungier.I like the collaging but, really, this one's all about the textured background. (No outdoor photos, I'm afraid, which feels a bit weird to me, but it's only for a few months, I suppose.)I put a rough coat of gesso onto the paper and, while it was still wet, I added streaks of Raw Umber and Deep Midnight Blue DecoArt Americana acrylic paint.

When the paint was dry, I stamped the Tim Holtz text stamp randomly in Potting Soil Archival. Stamping in Archival means it won't disappear on me as I add more layers.Next, I stencilled on some gesso Harlequins and, once they were dry, added a layer of DecoArt One Step crackle through the same stencil. I also added crackle paste randomly in other places with my palette knife.

When the crackle had done its work, I rubbed Raw Umber over the white Harlequins...... and White Wash paint over the other areas against the blue. I wiped off the excess while it was still wet, leaving the crackles nicely highlighted in each area.

A while back I ordered some 49 and Market stamps, including these rather cool stitching lines by Gabrielle Polacco. I stamped this one in Black Archival around the corners of my grungy panel.

In the end I added a couple of trios of tiny brads, bought on sale in Michaels.Love the effect in the opposite corners.

And the grungy Harlequins have a pleasing distressed look...

... which I think works really well with the messy "stitching".

Then it was time for some collaging. There are strips of tissue tape, torn book pages, both tea-stained and non-tea-stained - I brought some of each with me.There's a length of burlap ribbon with some narrow crocheted lace over it behind the Photobooth photo.

I've used some Thrift Shop Ephemera as well as a number brad. I hadn't put any metal elements in my stash, so I couldn't resist grabbing these in Michaels too on a coupon.

The wooden tag was also a Michaels purchase. I thought the tags would work well with the Small Talk phrases... I love it when a plan comes together!

I roughened the edges all around and inked them with Walnut Stain (I have a dozen mini Distress Inks with me - I wonder if you can guess which colours made the cut!).

And that's your lot for now. Auditions, callbacks and casting are all done now, and I'll be starting rehearsals this week, so I hope to be a more regular visitor once I've settled into the rhythm of things. In the meantime, thank you - as always - for your visits and lovely comments. Each and every one is so much appreciated. Happy Crafting all

Monday, 22 August 2016

Hello all! I'm over at A Vintage Journey today, stopping at Destination Inspiration. If you have a moment, do hop over and take a look at what I created with the contents of this month's travel bags. I'm afraid it's another tag full of my favourite colours and things - when I do have some crafting time, I can't resist them. But even limited crafting time is good for the soul and so too, I think, is this tag. I hope you like it.

Thanks so much for stopping by and for hopping too. For those who are curious, I did in the end pack a small(ish) travelling craft kit to bring with me to Columbus, Ohio, so there may even be a few more new things to share in the coming months. We'll see how time pans out. I hope to be a better blog visitor too, but we all know about good intentions and where that path leads... Happy Crafting all!

Monday, 15 August 2016

Hello all, I've something slightly different to share with you today. One of my favourite activities as a child (after reading) was colouring in, so I've been quietly amused by the adult colouring fad which seems to have swept the world lately.I've always known how relaxing it was, and I was delighted to discover some colouring books printed on watercolour paper so that now, as an adult, I can practise using watercolour paints without having to worry about drawing (a bit too scary to share just yet!).

Travelling as I am this year, I'm having to think very carefully about what supplies to take along for the ride. In my recent month-long jaunt around Europe - work and play - I had to really keep it down as I was changing country often, and the simplest thing seemed to me to be to take some watercolour paints, a Painterly Days watercolouring book by Kristy Rice, and my much-loved Pentel water brushes.

Here are just a few photos of my first encounters.The outlines are in a pale grey tone, so they are very subtle.

Obviously I started in my blue-green comfort zone...I'm not really particularly interested in the flowers, it turns out.

I'd just as happily stick to painting leaves all day long!I do think the colouring helps with learning the brush sweeps required for shaping a leaf... I'll be braver about my own freehand leaves in future, I think.

I went for a fairly delicate peachy look for the blooms...... with the occasional bit of bindweed in between.

Mostly, I was using a set of White Nights watercolour pans, but there are also some Ecoline inks involved in places.

The blue sky, for instance, is mainly Ecoline if I remember rightly. I do like how the leaves look against the early summer sky.

In any case, it was tremendously soothing to do, and I do recommend the Painterly Days books for anyone wanting to play with watercolours but feeling unready with their drawing.I'm still trying to decide whether to take a more substantial craft kit with me on the next trip, or whether I can bear to stick purely to the watercolours. Packing is imminent. Hmmm...

Thanks so much for stopping by. There'll be a new creation along soon and then, depending on what I decide to take with me in terms of crafting kit, there may be a few more, or we may be back on the Encores... we'll see! Happy crafting all!

Now this relaxation of the mind from work consists on playful words or deeds. Therefore it becomes a wise and virtuous man to have recourse to such things at times.
Thomas Aquinas

UPDATE

To answer Yvonne's question below... you can get these books in the UK via Amazon (and maybe elsewhere too), but click to the other sellers, not the main Amazon price. You'll find the cheapest ones despatched by Wordery. Here's the link to the flower one, but there are different editions so make sure you find the one you prefer.

Thursday, 11 August 2016

Hello all and welcome. Yes, I've finally found time to draw the winner of my blogaversary candy. My apologies for the delay - regulars will know I'm having a bit of a mad year! My warmest thanks go to all of you who left such lovely comments - Craftyblogland really is a special place - but there can only be one winner of this little haul...

I'm afraid in the interests of saving time I've forsaken my time-honoured names in the hat for this year and borrowed some assistance from technology. So without further ado, here is the randomly generated winner.

That's the always hilarious Princess Judy Palmer of Blog This! Congratulations, Judy! If you get in touch with me via the link in the sidebar to let me know your postal address, I'll try to get the package in the post before I set off on my travels again.Love and thanks to all. I am missing crafting and blogging now that they've become occasional rather than obsessional, but whenever I can drop in I will. In the meantime, I'm off to be creative in other spheres again. Happy crafting all!

To be creative means to be in love with life. You can be creative only if you love life enough that you want to enhance its beauty, you want to bring a little more music to it, a little more poetry to it, a little more dance to it.
Osho

Friday, 5 August 2016

Hello all! I seem to be constantly under time pressure these days, and I know I'm missing lots of amazing work all over Craftyblogland. My apologies...But there are still deadlines to meet, and today it's time for a new challenge over at A Vintage Journey. The wonderful Amanda would like us to Stencil It.It's a rare project here at Words and Pictures which doesn't include the use of a stencil so this was a lovely theme for me.And though the stencilling here is in the background, I've tried to leave as much of it visible as possible. And the title of the tag - Lost and Found - is also taken from the stencilled text.I'm squeezing the writing of this post in just a couple of hours before the deadline, though I'm writing about a tag I actually made over a month ago - the last time I was at home with my craft supplies. Given I don't remember too much about the making, I'll stick mainly to the lost-and-found story bubbling up from within.

As with the Carte Postale, the story was triggered by the Photobooth photo, though this one took me in a less cheerful direction. If you'd prefer simply to look at the pictures, do feel free!I was riveted by this little boy's gaze, and the look in his eyes - somewhere between bewilderment and determination.

Coupled with the crackled lost and found wording, and with the sombre colour combination, he became for me one of the Kindertransport children, rescued in the nick of time before war broke out across Europe.But although he found his way to safety, he also lost so much on the way...

The first Kindertransport rescued 196 children from a Berlin Jewish orphanage burned down by the Nazis in November 1938.But thousands more followed, and many of these were children whose parents leapt at the chance to get at least their children out of harm's way.The children were separated from their families, the vast majority of whom went on to die in the concentration camps.

They were brought to Britain by train and boat, usually with only a few precious belongings in a single bag, and were welcomed in to British foster homes, hostels, schools and farms.

It's hard to be exact about numbers, but around 10,000 predominantly Jewish children from Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia and Poland made the difficult journeys away from family and friends into the unknown, but also away from almost certain death to a new life.

Not all of them made it... some were still in Holland and Belgium when those countries were invaded, and were unable to make the further escape across the channel.

And, of course, after the war it took great efforts to ascertain whether there were any family members left with whom to reunite the displaced child refugees.

For most, the answer was a tragic no, and many remained in Britain, some going on to achieve great things, others simply living long and happy lives and building new generations of children and grandchildren.

None of that would have been possible without the extraordinary efforts of individuals like Nicholas Winton and Rabbi Solomon Schonfeld...

But it's also well worth noting that the British government of the day passed legislation to allow for the immigration of unaccompanied minors, as well as simplifying the immigration process in order to help the rescuers and the refugees.

Out of the horror of persecution and war come these stories of courage and compassion... Children fleeing for their lives, children who had lost their homes and their families, found new homes and a welcome from new families - lost and found.

It makes my heart ache that you see this same look in the eyes of all too many children in photos in our newspapers today... bewilderment at the changes they are undergoing, a desperate determination not to howl in despair, a quiet strength and dignity beyond their years.I hope we can find the compassion and courage needed now that there are thousands more children displaced by war and terror, so that they too can find their way to a new home. I refuse to believe that we have lost those qualities.Thank you for stopping by today. Even if you've skipped the words, I hope the pictures will inspire you to have a play with your stencils. You'll find lots more inspiration from my fabulous team-mates over at A Vintage Journey, so do come and Stencil It with us this month.

Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
George Santayana

Beyond thrilled to be one of Tim Holtz's

About Me

My name is Alison, and I'm a completely addicted crafter. Although I've done bits and pieces most of my life, this whole world of stashes and challenges and talented, inspirational crafters has blown me away since I discovered it in summer 2012.
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All content on this page, including text, photos and designs are copyright Alison Bomber. They are made available for personal inspiration, but please do not use them for profit or gain by means of publication or contest submissions without written permission. Many thanks.